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Screen Snapshots are a series of documentary short subjects originally produced by Screen Snapshots Inc. and distributed first by Pathe Exchange (1919-1924) then by CBC Film Sales Corporation (1925-1929) later Harry Cohn's Columbia Pictures took over production and distribution of the series for the Sound Talkie Era from 1930 to 1958. [1]
In 1971, Lim was selected to sculpt the Merlion statue in the Merlion Park along the Singapore River. [2] [9] Work on the sculpture began in November 1971 and ended in August 1972. It involved all eight of his children. [10] In 1975, Lim was among several local artists whose work was presented in China by S. Rajaratnam. [11]
Due to the completion of the Esplanade Bridge in 1997, the statue could no longer be viewed clearly from the Marina Bay Waterfront. [3] On 23 April 2002, the Merlion statue and its miniature statue were relocated from its original location to a new pier specially built on the other side of the Esplanade Bridge adjacent to the One Fullerton Hotel, which was completed on 25 April 2002.
Now, her photos will be collected in a book to help celebrate the show's 50th anniversary. The Art of The SNL Portrait , due out March 4 from Abrams Books, will be the first printed collection of ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... The 50th Anniversary Collection: ... "I Shall Be Free" (Take 3) 2:44: 23. "I Shall Be Free" (Take 5) ...
After a number of smaller Gettysburg reunions, including the 1906 Philadelphia Brigade-Pickett's Division reunion during which Brigadier General Lewis Armistead's captured sword was returned to the South, [10] in April 1908 General Henry S. Huidekoper of Philadelphia suggested a 1913 50th anniversary reunion to Pennsylvania Governor Edwin Sydney Stuart.
He eschewed a weekly variety series while singers such as Perry Como, and later, Andy Williams, embraced such exposure enthusiastically, with considerable benefits accruing to their record sales and to their long-term images. [3] Crosby was especially closely associated with ABC's variety show The Hollywood Palace.
Jeff Nichols tells the tragic story of a carefree Midwest motorcycle gang that transforms into something uglier.